Golden State Warriors guard Monta Ellis (8) defends as Philadelphia 76ers guard Lou Williams (23) shoots in the second half of an NBA basketball game, Friday, March 2, 2012, in Philadelphia. Williams led all scorers with 25 points as the 76ers won 105-83. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Philadelphia 76ers forward Elton Brand (42) tries to get past Golden State Warriors forward Ekpe Udoh (20) in the second half of an NBA basketball game, Friday, March 2, 2012, in Philadelphia. The 76ers won 105-83.

Photo: Alex Brandon, Associated Press

Philadelphia 76ers forward Elton Brand (42) tries to get past...

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Philadelphia 76ers guard Evan Turner (12) shoots in front of Golden State Warriors guard Brandon Rush (4) in the second half of an NBA basketball game, Friday, March 2, 2012, in Philadelphia. The 76ers won 105-83.

Philadelphia 76ers center Nikola Vucevic (8), from Montenegro, blocks a shot by Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson (11) in the second half of an NBA basketball game, Friday, March 2, 2012, in Philadelphia. The 76ers won 105-83.

PHILADELPHIA -- To honor the 50th anniversary of Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game, the Philadelphia 76ers banded together and used nine guys to match his legendary individual effort.

With the fans chanting, "100 for Wilt," Andre Iguodala made a fallaway jumper with 1:25 remaining to give the 76ers their first 100-point game in 20 tries. Iguodala's 12-point, 11-rebound and six-assist night pales in comparison to what Chamberlain did 90 miles west 50 years ago, but it led to Philadelphia's 105-83 drubbing of the Warriors.

The Atlantic Division-leading 76ers (22-15) were reeling, having lost six of their past seven games overall and having gone without a home win since beating the Lakers on Feb. 6. They had been limited to fewer than 90 points nine times since their last 100-point outing, against Washington on Jan. 23.

"We didn't respond," Warriors coach Mark Jackson said. "That's not the defense we play. It was a disappointing effort once again."

Jackson hasn't questioned his team's effort too many times this season, but he's done it twice just three games into the Warriors' season-long, five-game road trip. On a disjointed night, during which long national TV breaks lulled the crowd of 18,323 into near silence, the Warriors (14-19) had lapses when it looked as though they were asleep.

There should have been plenty to energize the Warriors, who had won three of their past four and had climbed within three games of the Western Conference's eighth and final playoff spot. Plus, the 76ers had handed the Warriors their most lopsided loss of the season - a 107-79 shellacking at Oracle Arena on Dec. 31, when Monta Ellis missed the game to attend his grandmother's funeral in Mississippi.

"We're not good enough to turn it on and off," Jackson said. "That's not who we are. We have to be on all of the time. We might not always make shots, but we have to be aggressive and play with force.

"There is a way to lose, and this is not the way."

Because of a quirk of NBA scheduling fate, the Warriors were playing in Philadelphia - just east of Hershey, Pa., where Chamberlain had the legendary game 50 years ago to the day. All fans in attendance received a specially mounted 2-by-2-inch piece of the court on which Chamberlain scored his 100-point game.

During the pregame warm-ups, the fourth-quarter radio broadcast of the 1962 game was played over the public-address system. Philadelphia managing owner Joshua Harris and Warriors owner Joe Lacob made a pregame presentation, and members of Chamberlain's family were honored at halftime.

"As a basketball junkie, I'm well aware of what Wilt meant to the game," Jackson said. "I'm shocked that when we talk about the greatest ever, we don't automatically include him in the conversation. When you average 50 (points) and 25 (rebounds) for a season and do some of the things that he was able to do for his career, it's mind-boggling.

Game review

Key stat: The Warriors went 5-for-18 from three-point range against the 76ers and are 9-for-52 (17.3 percent) three games into this five-game road trip.

Key stretch: Philadelphia opened the second half with a 13-4 run that gave it a 63-51 lead with 7:29 remaining in the third quarter.

Key quote: "We didn't come out of the (halftime) locker room with the right mind-set," Warriors coach Mark Jackson said. "They jumped on us and took total control of the basketball game."

Of note: Monta Ellis and David Lee combined for 44 points on 18-of-41 shooting. The rest of the Warriors had 29 points on 15-of-41 shooting.

- Rusty Simmons

Warriors opening tip

Father knows best: Asked about Stephen Curry's chronic ankle and foot injuries, his father, Dell, joked, "He gets that stuff from his mother." Dell Curry, speaking on 95.7 The Game, went on to say his son's most recent foot sprain, which has cost him three consecutive starts, isn't troubling because it is unrelated to his May ankle surgery.